Don’t just blame the climate

Pakistan’s floods are an immediate crisis 

Pakistan is once again facing deadly floods, and the crisis is still getting worse. In Punjab, over 2.2 million people have been displaced and nearly 4,000 villages are underwater as the Sutlej, Ravi, and Chenab rivers keep overflowing. Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has also suffered badly, with a cloudburst in Buner and flash floods in other districts that have killed more than 320 people and left many missing. Sindh is now in danger too, as floodwaters move south and could submerge farmland and towns. Across the country, the death toll is nearing 1000, thousands of homes have been destroyed, and rescue efforts are struggling to keep up. With more rain expected, the damage is still increasing, and millions remain at risk.

Climate change is undoubtedly making rainfall heavier and glaciers melt faster, but pointing to climate alone is not enough. Intense rains may be unavoidable, yet massive destruction does not have to follow. The key lies in preparation. Had Pakistan started work months ahead of the monsoon— by unclogging drains, strengthening embankments, protecting floodplains, and arranging timely evacuations— the same floodwaters could have been controlled with far less damage to lives and livelihoods.

The danger has been made worse by cross-border water flows. India’s release of water from upstream dams into the Ravi, Chenab, and Sutlej has sent sudden surges downstream, often without enough warning, flooding villages and farmland in Punjab. While India is battling its own monsoon floods, these abrupt releases leave Pakistan with little time to prepare. What is urgently needed is a stronger and more transparent system of coordination.

Just weeks ago, China also faced extreme rains, with parts of Beijing’s Miyun District receiving more than 540 millimetres in only a few days— almost equal to a full year’s rainfall. The downpour killed over 40 people, forced around 80,000 to evacuate, and left more than 130 villages without power. Authorities moved quickly, issuing top-level flood alerts and carrying out mass relocations to keep the damage from spreading further.

Now it is India facing the brunt of the monsoon. In Punjab, floods have affected more than 350,000 people, left 37 dead, and destroyed crops on nearly 175,000 hectares of farmland across almost 2,000 villages. Across the north, the toll is far heavier: at least 130 deaths in August alone as rivers like the Yamuna and Chenab burst their banks, roads collapsed, and whole towns were cut off.

Pakistan is living through a disaster that could have been less deadly. The floods show us that climate change may be the trigger, but the scale of tragedy comes from our own neglect. To protect lives, crops, and cities, the country must move from reaction to foresight. If Pakistan begins treating every dry day as preparation for the next monsoon, these floods can one day become less of a curse and more of an opportunity to build a secure water future.

In Kishtwar, Jammu and Kashmir, a sudden cloudburst turned into a flash flood that killed 67 people, injured hundreds, and left around 200 missing. India has scrambled helicopters, boats, and relief teams, while also pushing stricter controls on floodplains. The picture from China and India shows that while neither country can stop extreme rain, early evacuations, tougher rules, and investment in safer infrastructure can prevent disasters from becoming as deadly as they otherwise might.

Right now, the Pakistan government’s focus has to be on both relief and readiness. In Punjab and KP, flood camps urgently need clean water, sanitation, and medical help to stop diseases like cholera and malaria. Evacuation routes must stay open, with boats and trucks ready for stranded families. At the same time, authorities cannot wait for the monsoon to finish before acting. NDMA and PDMAs must go beyond warnings—by enforcing floodplain rules, mapping shelters, running drills, and storing supplies in the dry season so the response is automatic when the rains begin.

But the bigger question is how to avoid this cycle in the future. Pakistan must treat floods not just as a natural disaster, but also as an opportunity. The billions of litres now drowning farmland could instead be stored through Managed Aquifer Recharge (MAR), wetlands, and small diversion weirs in hill torrents. These systems can capture flood pulses, reduce their destructive force, and bank water for drought months— a lifeline in a water-scarce country. A 2024 study in the ‘’Journal of Groundwater Science and Engineering’’ found that southern Punjab alone could store nearly 2 cubic kilometers of floodwater through underground recharge. But despite this huge potential, such projects are still not a priority for the government.

 

The way forward is clear: 

-Act before the monsoon, not after.

-Invest in nature-based solutions like wetlands and sponge zones alongside embankments.

– Empower NDMA and PDMAs to enforce laws, train local rescue groups, and run drills.

-Ensure real-time coordination with India on river water releases to reduce sudden flood risks.

-Launch a national flood-to-storage programme to turn destruction into resilience.

Pakistan is living through a disaster that could have been less deadly. The floods show us that climate change may be the trigger, but the scale of tragedy comes from our own neglect. To protect lives, crops, and cities, the country must move from reaction to foresight. If Pakistan begins treating every dry day as preparation for the next monsoon, these floods can one day become less of a curse and more of an opportunity to build a secure water future.

Mahnoor Raza
Mahnoor Raza
The writer is a freelance columnist

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